PROPOSAL OF A FINANCIAL STRATEGY FOR THE PROTECTED AREAS NATIONAL SYSTEM - CHILE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This document is a translated version from the draft report prepared by the consultant Juan Ladron de Guevara (April, 2014) for the Project “Building a comprehensive National Protected Areas System for Chile: financial and operational framework� (UNDP/GEF SNAP Project). The full report is available in the website project (www.proyectogefareasprotegidas.cl). This document pertains to a consultancy technical report prepared for the UNDP/GEF SNAP Project. Therefore, do not necessarily represent the views of the governmental, private and international institutions involved in the project.
Contents The importance of protected areas and respective commitments 5 Challenges and proposals for action
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Estimate of financial requirements
6
Vision
8
Strategic Objective 2030
8
Stages
8
Central elements, lines and instruments, 2015-2020
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Targets
12
Options for meeting targets
12
Scenarios modeling
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Operational plan 2015-2019
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The importance of protected areas and respective commitments Protected areas and their resources provide a number of public goods, including environmental goods (for example, water provision and habitat for species of great cultural value) and those which have a direct social benefit, for example, open air spaces for recreation and learning, and which support the tourism industry and local economies across the country. In Chile, protected areas account for 20.7% and 4% of terrestrial and marine ecosystems, respectively. They have been created to preserve areas of great environmental, scenic and social value for the benefit of all Chileans. As signatory of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), Chile has undertaken to meet the goals of the Strategic Plan 2010-2020 and the Aichi Targets. The three primary objectives of CBD are: (i) the conservation of biological diversity, (ii) the sustainable use of its components, and (iii) the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising out of the utilization of genetic resources. Target 11 was set for protected areas and it is as follows: “By 2020, at least 17 per cent of terrestrial and inland water, and 10 per cent of coastal and marine areas, especially areas of particular importance for biodiversity and ecosystem services, are conserved through effectively and equitably managed, ecologically representative and well connected systems of protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures, and integrated into the wider landscapes and seascapes.”
Challenges and proposals for action The consolidation of the Protected Areas National System (SNAP) must consider a steady process to reach its main objective, a challenge which requires funding and which is the objective of the Financial Strategy.1
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Improving public protected areas to fulfil conservation objectives
• Improving the efficiency and effectiveness of management of protected areas. • Increasing the number of terrestrial and marine protected areas in operation.
Increasing funding for protected areas
• Strengthening tourism and its contribution to financing SNAP. • Diversifying sources of funding.
Including and supporting private protected areas
• Officially approving private protected areas. • Providing mechanisms and sources of funding. • Supporting the development of private protected areas in Mediterranean zones.
The Strategy was developed during general and bilateral meetings with different public stakeholders and NGOs that are part of the project.
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Estimate of financial requirements Table 1 shows the funding required to reach level one of strengthening (basic) and to fulfil all international commitments (optimal) for each one of the subsystems of protected areas: public (both terrestrial and marine) and private. In the basic scenario, the financial gap is US$ 69.7 million per year, while in the optimal scenario, it is US$ 231.1 million per year.
TABLE 1 Total funding gaps for terrestrial, marine and private protected areas, basic scenario and optimal scenario, millions of Chilean pesos and millions of dollars per year.
PROTECTED Level of Basic Optimal AREAS financing 2012 scenario scenario Terrestrial protected areas
Funding gap Basic scenario
Funding gap Optimal scenario
13,816.0
40,712.8 56,998.0 -26,896.8
-43,182.0
Marine protected areas
61.5
6,056.4 6,814.8 -5,994.8
-6,753.2
Private protected areas
2,713.0
3,798.3 65,318.8 -1,085.2
-62,605.7
TOTAL ($) TOTAL (US$)
16,590.6 34.0
50,567.6 129,131.7 -33,976.9 103.8
265.2
-69.7
-112,541.0 -231.1 Source: Prepared by the author.
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Table 2 shows the basic and optimal scenarios for terrestrial, private and marine protected areas and provides a reason (R) for the criteria used for each scenario, as well as the advantages (A) and disadvantages (D).
TABLE 2 Basic and optimal scenarios for terrestrial, private and marine protected areas, reasons (R), advantages (A) and disadvantages (D).
Basic
Comment
Optimal
Comment
Terrestrial
Improved System of Protected Areas 2 (SMAP 2) (Source: Figueroa, 2012)
R: a comprehensive job which requires management plans, monitoring species and trained park rangers. A: estimate of costs published and disseminated. D: undervalued construction costs.
Threat control (invasive alien species, fire control)
R: SMAP 2 does not include those costs (threats control) and is an important issue for the country and for conservation.2 A: actions required to conserve and protect native biodiversity. D: there is limited information on expenditure in the budget, the percentages are based on international experiences.
Private
There is no public investment in private protected areas.
R: authorities are currently discussing not investing in private protected areas. A: lower cost for the State. D: discourages private conservation and results in missed opportunities.
Tax incentive
R: the State provides incentives by means of the presumptive income on conservation in the Mediterranean hot spot (lower current conservation). A: favorable conditions for conservation efforts. D: it is difficult to obtain the same conditions in areas of high agricultural productivity in the Mediterranean.
Marine
Management of five marine reservesi
R: detailed estimate of costs for the same service charge. A: real estimates with data for five officially declared marine reserves. D: a small number of marine protected areas in comparison with the estimate made by Tognelli et al. 2009.3
Including marine parks and priority sites
R: includes what public services consider the best priority sites for future marine protected areas. A: institutionally approved. D: no clear identification methodology, slightly different from the proposal made by learned society (Tognelli et al. 2009), so a study must be carried out which defines priority sites linking technical and political aspects. Source: Prepared by the author.
2 Mann, A. 2008. Vertebrados dañinos en Chile: desafíos y perspectivas. Actas del seminario taller. 8 January 2008 Santiago, Chile. Santo Tomás University p. 109 3
Tognelli, M., Fernádez, M., Marquet, P. 2009. Assessing the performance of the existing and proposed network of marine protected areas to conserve marine biodiversity in Chile. Biological Conservation 142: 3147-3153.
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VISION By 2030, the Protected Areas National System will manage units (i.e. PAs) that represent all of Chilean biodiversity, in accordance with high standards of efficiency, effectiveness and transparency and a stable, diversified financing structure which shows the public goods and services it provides for society.4
Strategic Objective 2030 The Strategic Objective 2030 is guaranteeing funding for the conservation of all protected areas in Chile, so that they can provide public goods and sustainable ecosystem services for the benefit and knowledge of all Chileans.
STAGES • Stage 1 (2015-2020) aims above all to implement SNAP and set up a model based on effectiveness, efficiency and transparency. This includes creating the Biodiversity and Protected Areas Service (SBAP). This Service does not need to be in place before this stage begins. • Building on the model created during Stage 1, Stage 2 (2021-2030) will see the expansion of SNAP in order to meet national targets and international commitments.
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Within the framework of the Financial Strategy, public terrestrial protected areas include national parks, national reserves, national monuments that make up the National System of State-Protected Areas (SNASPE), natural sanctuaries, national heritage sites, priority sites and Ramsar sites. Marine protected areas include marine reserves, marine parks and priority sites to be declared marine protected areas. Private protected areas will also be considered, using the report prepared by the Senda Darwin Foundation for the UNDP/GEF SNAP Project and a list of private conservation initiatives. To estimate the cost of bridging ecosystem representation gaps, the remaining areas in Valparaiso Region, the Metropolitan Region and Libertador General Bernardo O´Higgins Region were considered and it was assumed that they are private and are constantly allocated State subsidies. To achieve the vision proposed, the Financial Strategy is designed for a 16-year period starting in 2015 and ending in 2030. 4
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Central elements, lines and instruments, 2015-2020 It has been proposed that the Strategy is based on three central elements, namely: Modernizing the State and improving the efficiency of management of public protected areas
Diversifying sources of funding for public protected areas SNAP Financial Sustainability
Developing mechanisms and instruments for financing private protected areas
Modernizing the State and improving the efficiency of management of public protected areas.
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The objective is to mobilize higher levels of public resources, users and beneficiaries by increasing the effectiveness, efficiency and transparency of management based on standards that aim to ensure the conservation and provision of public goods and ecosystem services by protected areas in the long term.
Lines of action
1.1 Strengthening the management of protected areas
1.2 Supplementing funds by means of a Regional Financial Strategy
1.3 Incentives to increase the generation of revenue, primarily from tourism
Mechanism/Instrument
• Improving planning, integrating better development into the public use plan (public use area - AUP) and better development of programs with the support of tourism services. • Calculating the budget for the General Management or Administration Plan • Program for monitoring processes and results • Funding for the provision of services and public goods • Exploring opportunities for using ICTs
• Implementing the financial strategy at the regional and protected areas level • Developing National Fund for Regional Development (FNDR) budgetary programs
• Agreement with the Chilean Budgetary Affairs Bureau (DIPRES) on an incentive mechanism for own resources • Bill which strengthens the capacity to generate income in marine protected areas • Design and implementation of an ex ante evaluation of tourist projects, follow-up and ex post evaluation • Strengthening current mechanisms linked with tourism.
Diversifying sources of funding for public protected areas.
The objective is to implement new mechanisms which increase and diversify the resources available for the conservation of protected areas in the short, medium and long term.
Lines of action
2.1 Conservation Fund
2.2 Public Fundraising Campaigns
Mechanism/Instrument
• Creating a fund that allows better channeling and greater flexibility in resource allocation • Developing management, transparency and efficiency mechanisms
• Mass campaigns
Developing mechanisms and instruments for financing private protected areas.
The objective is to establish the conditions and mechanisms which encourage the private sector to create and preserve protected areas over time. It also aims to ensure that these areas are fully integrated in terms of rights and duties into SNAP and that they are suitably rewarded to ensure their preservation and that they continue to provide goods and services to society.
Lines of action
3.1 Incentives for private protected areas
3.2 Offset projects in the environmental impact assessment system (SEIA)
3.3 New protected areas
Mechanism/Instrument
• Supporting the conservation effort • Productive development • Establishing national conservation priorities • Recognition and/or incentives for owners who allocate land for conservation
• Creating a methodological guide for pilot tests • Institutional incorporation • Legal incorporation of private protected areas into compensation banks
• Localization in areas not represented or underrepresented • Incentives for buffer areas • New public protected areas
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TARGETS The targets are defined in terms of the type of expense incurred (operation, transfer versus investments). The costs are then broken down according to the instruments proposed. This creates a scenario in which the instruments must achieve a determined performance. Table 3 shows the targets for 2020 and 2030 which correspond to basic and optimal scenarios, respectively, according to the type of expense. TABLE 3 Targets for 2020 and 2030, Type of expense (in CLP$ per year and US$ per year)
Type of expense
Level of financing 2012
Scenario 2020 (basic)
Scenario 2030 (optimal)
Cost of public protected areas operation (including staff and monitoring)
12,854,707,205
30,915,040,072
43,015,400,349
Transfers to private stakeholders for operating private protected areas
2,713,090,096
3,798,326,134
65,318,870,897
Annual investment
1,855,106,662
15,854,256,220 20,797,492,991
TOTAL
17,422,903,963 50,567,622,426 129,131,764,238
TOTAL (US$)
35,783,331
103,856,279
265,212,085 Source: Prepared by the author.
Options for meeting targets Scenario 1
Under Scenario 1 modernization of SNAP, public expenditure growth rates are similar to those observed, tourism is strong across SNAP and successful penetration of new instruments is noted.
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Scenario 2
Under Scenario 2 modernization of SNAP, the public expenditure growth rate is twice the historic average, there is a higher tourism rate and moderate penetration of new instruments.
Scenario 3
Under Scenario 3, modernization of SNAP uses public funds only, there is considerable growth in tourism and penetration of new instruments is very limited. Public subsidies are used to bridge the gap.
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Scenarios modeling Target for 2020
Table 4 provides a breakdown of costs for the 2020 target under the three scenarios. Figure 1 shows the percentage breakdown where private contributions are higher in Scenario 1, but decline in Scenarios 2 and 3. TABLE 4 Breakdown of costs according to the contributions made for the 2020 target for the three scenarios (in CLP$ per year)
TARGET FOR 2020
Level of financing 2012
Scenario 1
Scenario 2
Scenario 3
State (General Administration)
7,974,348,205
10,871,015,134
14,889,121,437
18,662,093,630
State (FNDR)
1,680,990,662
15,152,408,055
15,004,046,752
14,707,775,700
-
1,085,236,038
1,085,236,038
1,085,236,038
23,458,963,199
19,589,218,199
16,112,517,058
State (Private Subsidies) Private Costs (All Means) Total
7,767,565,096 17,422,903,963
50,567,622,426 50,567,622,426 50,567,622,426 Source: Prepared by the author.
FIGURE 1 Percentage breakdown of type of expenditure for the 2020 target for the three scenarios.
Scenario 3 Scenario 2 Scenario 1 Level of financing 2012 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
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• State (General Administration)
• State (FNDR)
• State (Private Subsidies)
• Private Costs (All Means)
Table 5 provides a breakdown of costs for the 2030 target for the three scenarios. Figure 2 shows the percentage breakdown where State contributions (General Administration and FNDR) are lower in Scenario 1 than Scenarios 2 and 3. TABLE 5 Breakdown of costs according to the contributions made for the 2030 target for the three scenarios (in CLP$ per year)
TARGET FOR 2030
Level of financing 2012
Scenario 1
Scenario 2
Scenario 3
State (General Administration)
7,974,348,205
13,923,774,672
23,379,540,244
35,968,097,258
State (FNDR)
1,680,990,662
19,026,225,937
17,880,700,369
10,385,210,043
State (Private Subsidies)
-
29,946,345,353
49,542,006,622
59,339,837,257
Private Costs (All Means)
7,767,565,096
66,235,418,276
38,329,517,003
23,438,619,680
Total
17,422,903,963
129,131,764,238 129,131,764,238 129,131,764,238 Source: Prepared by the author.
FIGURE 2 Percentage breakdown of type of expenditure for the 2030 target for the three scenarios.
Scenario 3 Scenario 2 Scenario 1 Level of financing 2012 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
• State (General Administration)
• State (FNDR)
• State (Private Subsidies)
• Private Costs (All Means)
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Operational plan 2015-2019 The Operational Plan is the mechanism used to implement the Strategy in the short term, regardless of the option or scenario chosen. At the start, it will be backed by the GEF SNAP Project and later by a five-year inter-agency modernization program which will be presented to DIPRES as part of the draft budget law (initially the e-parks program). The resources are valued at $ 9,715 million (US$ 19,952,7575) over a five-year period and they take into account other direct actions by participating institutions, as defined in the e-Parks program. The efforts required to start making developments in each of the strategic lines are outlined below.
Strengthening management
Supplementing funds by means of a Regional Financial Strategy
Incentives to increase the generation of revenue, primarily from tourism
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Average value of the dollar 486.9 (Source: SII)
5
Mechanism/Instrument
Key starting activities
Improving planning by integrating public use plans and developing programs
Developing a methodology for public use plans
Calculating the budget for the General Management/ Administration Plan
Developing a methodology for calculating the budget for terrestrial protected areas. The aim of the budget is to assess the cost of meeting plan objectives (target, indicators of results and impact)
Program for monitoring processes and results
Creating a program for monitoring management processes and results
Funding for the provision of services and public goods
Identifying activities, processes and protected wildlife area services
Use of ICTs
Developing the first version of an online platform
Implementing the Financial Strategy at the regional and protected areas level
Drawing up a report that states the sources of funding for developing financial strategies. Including operational plans with dates, activities and levels of implementation
Developing FNDR budgetary programs (Target: $1 billion programs in each one of the 15 regions)
Governance to reach an agreement with the Regional Council so that FNDR funds initiatives in protected wildlife areas as part of a global strengthening policy
Agreement with DIPRES on an incentive mechanism for own resources
Consolidating data that justifies the need to encourage own resources
Bill which strengthens the capacity to generate income in marine protected areas
Developing technical support information and articles that allow charging in marine protected areas as part of the SBAP bill
Design and implementation of an ex ante evaluation of tourist projects
Developing a methodology for sustainable tourist projects in accordance with the management and financial return on projects plan
Conservation Fund
Fundraising campaigns
Incentives for private protected areas
Compensation banks
New protected areas
Mechanism/Instrument
Key starting activities
Creating a fund that allows better channeling of resources
Incorporating the initiative into the SBAP bill which would allow a Conservation Fund to be set up
Developing management, transparency and efficiency mechanisms
Developing management, transparency and efficiency mechanisms for the donation of funds which are in line with the discussion on the General Law on Donating
Mass campaigns
Market survey and designing the strategy and content and publishing objectives for a mass campaign at the national level
Mechanism/Instrument
Key starting activities
Supporting the conservation effort
Identifying, developing and evaluating financing mechanisms for (scientific, technical) conservation initiatives, including a new version of the Native Forest Law (LBN) incentive
Productive development
Developing a proposal for productive incentives in conservation areas
Establishing national conservation priorities
Carrying out a study that sets national priorities for creating new protected areas
Recognition and/or incentives for owners who allocate land for conservation
Developing an official proposal that establishes and recognizes the conservation right (supporting the current bill being processed)
Creating a methodological guide for pilot tests
Developing a general methodological proposal for compensation banks in SEIA
Institutional incorporation
Governance with the Chilean environmental assessment service (SEA)(SEIA) through meetings and seminars
Legal incorporation of private protected areas into compensation banks
Developing a legal report on the requirements for incorporating private protected areas into the system of compensation banks
Localization in areas not represented or under-represented
Creating a map of areas of interest in the country for conservation or new protected areas
Incentives for buffer areas
Evaluating alternative financial incentives for corridors and buffer zones that would benefit conservation
New public protected areas
Developing a methodology for financial management when creating new public protected areas, including indicators of efficiency and saving
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